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Maine Republican plans to call for probe into alleged interpreter fraud

Maine’s expenditures on interpreter services were first flagged by a federal agent as entering the territory of waste, abuse or fraud in 2020.
Jeff Timberlake sits during a legislative session.
Sen. Jeff Timberlake, R-Turner, is pictured in the Senate chamber on June 30, 2021. Photo by Troy R. Bennett of the Bangor Daily News.
This story appears as part of a collaboration between The Maine Monitor and Maine Focus, the investigative team of the Bangor Daily News, a partnership to strengthen investigative journalism in Maine. You can show your support for this effort with a donation to The Monitor. Read more about the partnership.

A top Republican on the Maine’s Legislature’s watchdog committee said he plans to call for an investigation into interpreter fraud following reporting from the Bangor Daily News.

Sen. Jeff Timberlake of Turner, who sits on the Government Oversight Committee, said he needs to study the issue more ahead of the Legislature convening in January but expects he’ll file a letter asking the panel look into the fraud within MaineCare, the state’s version of Medicaid, the federal and state health care program for low-income people.

His comments came Wednesday, a day after the Maine Department of Health and Human Services halted payments to a provider that allegedly overbilled for interpreter services by more than $1 million.

The BDN also published a story detailing a never-before-seen report written by a federal agent that raised concerns five years ago about potential widespread fraudulent billing for interpreter services in Maine.

“I think it’s something that we need to take a serious look at,” Timberlake said.

The 2020 report from a federal agent flagged Maine’s expenditures on interpreter services as entering the territory of waste, abuse or fraud. Claims were rising despite a steady or falling number of newly arrived refugees.

The report came about a year after the federal government prosecuted three providers along with two interpreters, who fraudulently billed MaineCare for millions of dollars’ worth of interpreter services that didn’t happen or were overinflated.

Data obtained by the BDN shows the levels of spending that were flagged by the reports have continued. A review of claims submitted and dollars spent on interpreters shows that consistently over the last 10 years, a handful of organizations by far have filed and gotten the most of the $41 million the state has spent.

One of them is Gateway Community Services, the Portland-based company that has faced allegations of overbilling from a former employee, first published by The Maine Wire, the media arm of the conservative Maine Policy Institute.

The move by DHHS came a day after U.S. Rep. James Comer of Kentucky, the top Republican on the House oversight committee, sent a letter to the U.S. Treasury that flagged Gateway along with a host of current and former employees as potential targets of a broader welfare fraud investigation being conducted by the panel.

Comer’s letter directly tied for the first time Gateway to the committee’s investigation that has largely been focused on Minnesota.

There was no reaction from top elected Democrats on Wednesday. A spokesperson for Gov. Janet Mills, who is running for U.S. Senate in 2026, did not respond to a request for comment. Nor did Sen. Henry Ingwersen of Arundel and Rep. Michele Meyer of Eliot, the co-chairs of the legislative committee overseeing MaineCare.

Several candidates running to succeed the term-limited Mills have put pressure on her administration over the issue this month. One of them, health tech entrepreneur Owen McCarthy, praised The Maine Wire’s reporting and called for an audit of government agencies in a Facebook post.

Assistant Maine Senate Minority Leader Matt Harrington, R-Sanford, has raised concerns since May about Gateway and more broadly about the state’s spending on interpreting services. He said for months now he’s wanted top state officials to open an investigation into the spending.

As the new legislative session approaches, Harrington said he thinks more calls for action and investigation are coming. However, the calls won’t be new, he said. State republicans have been calling on Mills for months now to look into these issues, Harrington said.

“For me, I would just like to see it taken seriously, from [Attorney General Aaron Frey], from the Mills administration,” he said. “The silence is really deafening.”


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Sawyer Loftus, Bangor Daily News

Sawyer Loftus is an investigative reporter at the Bangor Daily News and was named the state’s journalist of the year by the Maine Press Association in 2024.

Sawyer previously worked for Vermont Public Radio, The Burlington Free Press and VTDigger. He was also the editor-in-chief of the Vermont Cynic, the University of Vermont's independent student newspaper. He is based in Bangor.

Contact Sawyer via email: moc.s1768797759wenyl1768797759iadro1768797759gnab@1768797759sutfo1768797759ls1768797759

Michael Shepherd, Bangor Daily News

Michael Shepherd is the editor who oversees Maine Focus at the Bangor Daily News. He has led the BDN’s political coverage since 2019.

He is a University of Maine graduate with a masters degree from the Muskie School of Public Service. He lives with his family in Augusta.

Contact Michael via email: moc.s1768797759wenyl1768797759iadro1768797759gnab@1768797759drehp1768797759ehsm1768797759



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